Time magazine released its annual roundup of the world’s 100 most influential people, and Beyoncé landed the cover, topping a wide-ranging list of entertainers, politicians, athletes, and executives.

“Beyoncé doesn’t just sit at the table. She builds a better one,” Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg writes in a tribute to the 32-year-old superstar. “In December, she took the world by surprise when she released a new album, complete with videos, and announced it on Facebook and Instagram. Beyoncé shattered music-industry rules—and sales records.”

“[Robert] Redford…created a utopia in the middle of conservative Utah for successful filmmakers to interact with young filmmakers, and thus Sundance—the laboratory and festival—was born,” producer Harvey Weinstein wrote of the Hollywood icon. “If you’re lucky enough to hang out with Bob Redford, get ready for an opinionated, brilliant, insightful discussion of moviemaking from the point of view of a legendary actor and pioneering director-producer.”

Mary Barra, the first female CEO of a major global automaker, earned high praise from former Ford president Lee Iacocca.

“In a perfect world, gender shouldn’t matter,” he writes. “So it’s about time someone of Mary Barra’s caliber and experience was appointed to the coveted position of General Motors CEO…If she remains as forthcoming as I’ve seen her on television with Congress, she will enjoy a long tenure at the helm.”

Other leaders on the list include U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Artists in the Top 100 include British actor Benedict Cumberbatch, songwriters Robert Lopez and Kristin Anderson-Lopez, who wrote the Disney hit song “Let It Go,” and Scandal actor Kerry Washington.